Say Something Real
By Michelle Bryant

Michelle Bryant
As we find ourselves in the midst of another turbulent era in American history, it is impossible to ignore the unsettling echoes of our past. Just as the post-Civil War Reconstruction period of the late 1800s exposed deep divisions within our country, so too does the present moment. If we are honest, the backlash we see today against Black progress is not new, but rather a recycling of old tactics meant to undermine the hard-won gains of African Americans.
The Reconstruction era, spanning roughly 12 years after the Civil War, was a time of hope and promise. For the first time, formerly enslaved people were elected to public office, acquired land, built schools, and exercised their right to vote. Yet, this progress was met with fierce resistance. Many white Americans, threatened by the idea of Black autonomy and equality, launched a campaign of violence, voter suppression, and legislative sabotage to reverse these advances. The result was the rise of Jim Crow laws: explicit efforts to return Black people to a position of subservience and dependency.
Fast forward to today, and the parallels are striking. We hear rhetoric from political figures, including those associated with the Trump administration, and from the President himself, that eerily echoes the language of “taking back our land,” a dog whistle for reclaiming a racial hierarchy. Homeland Security recruitment ads, with their thinly veiled calls for domestic vigilance, stoke fears of “the other” and often target Black and brown communities. Meanwhile, the systematic dismantling of Black history from school curricula, under the guise of fighting “reverse discrimination,” attempts to erase the very stories that remind us of our collective struggle and resilience.
Perhaps most troubling are the ongoing attacks on the 1965 Voting Rights Act. This landmark legislation was born from generations of sacrifice, yet it is now under siege by those who seek to restrict access to the ballot box. We see new laws and gerrymandering efforts designed to dilute the power of Black voters, all while commercials and public statements fuel resentment with claims of so-called “reverse discrimination.” These tactics, both subtle and overt, are meant to strip away the rights and dignity that so many fought and died to achieve.
Let us be clear: the issue is not simply about one administration or a single policy. It is about a sustained effort to roll back the progress of the last century and return us to a time when Black people’s rights were negotiable. We cannot afford to be complacent.
The lessons of Reconstruction are clear—gains can be undone, rights can be revoked, and history can repeat itself if we are not vigilant.
Now, more than ever, we must stand together to protect our hard-won rights and continue the work of those who came before us. Only through unity, vigilance, and the unwavering pursuit of justice can we ensure that the promise of freedom and equality is truly realized by all.




